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A resolution to stop outsourcing |
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Lightningbolt
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Topic: A resolution to stop outsourcingPosted: 06 August 2008 at 11:40am |
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Anyone have any ideas on curbing outsourcing product manufacturing to other countries? What would it take to bring back the multitudes of manufacturing jobs to our country? I just don't know enough about economics etc. It seems that if many were willing to take a cut in pay that it would bring jobs back but the cost of living continues to rise. This isn't an idle question due to the fact that it has crushed the industry that I make my living at which is building houses, which is a sort of first line of defense in terms of being an indicator of the economy. If you want to know the current state of the economy for a certain area, ask a residential builder if they're busy. It's truely a front line indication.
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rednekk98
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Posted: 06 August 2008 at 11:46am |
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Isn't the falling dollar already doing that in a few sectors?
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Dune
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Posted: 06 August 2008 at 11:47am |
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It all depends on who are you attempting to help. Outsourcing does definitely hurt the unskilled labor force, but it does wonders for the skilled fields. It also depends on the value of goods. If our goods continue to stay expensive, we will import much more than we export and we will continue to outsource. Those are very broad explanations though.
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Rambino
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Posted: 06 August 2008 at 11:48am |
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Why would you want to do that? Outsourcing manufacturing was one of the best things to happen to this country. And the rest of the world as well, for that matter. |
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Lightningbolt
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Posted: 06 August 2008 at 12:06pm |
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I don't accept that as being anything good for the long-term. Sure it's good for the profit magin for a CEO but how is it helping the 500 workers that lost their jobs? Edited by Lightningbolt - 06 August 2008 at 12:07pm |
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Dune
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Posted: 06 August 2008 at 12:14pm |
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True, but pushing to buy American made products to hurt outsourcing makes consumer prices skyrocket. No longer can we buy a t-shirt for $10, now we have to pay for the $50 American one. |
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Pariel
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Posted: 06 August 2008 at 12:15pm |
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Most of the outsourcing happening in this country is unskilled labor. It's jobs that we can not only afford to lose, but for short- and long-term economic success, make sense to cut. Those 500 workers may be out of a job, but the economic conditions here benefit from cheaper labor. Granted, this is coming from a upper-middle class point of view. Also, I'm a little confused as to why outsourcing would affect homebuilding? Unless you mean illegal immigrant labor, which isn't the same. The decline in the housing market as a whole certainly affects it though. That's a different, if economically related, issue. |
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Rambino
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Posted: 06 August 2008 at 12:18pm |
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It's econ 101. Actually, it's older than that - it's chapter 1 of Wealth of Nations. Let's say you are a carriage maker. To make carriages you need planks and nails and metal bands. You are capable of making each of those yourself. After breaking down how much time it takes you to perform each task, and figuring how much money you make for selling your finished carriages, you determine that you make $15/hour for time spent working on the parts and the carriages You know a guy who can make nails for $5/hour. Therefore, even though you are perfectly capable of making nails yourself, you hire this guy to make nails for you. This frees up time for you to assemble more carriages, which raises your effective hourly income from $15/hour to maybe $17/hour. By outsourcing the low-end work (nail-making) you were able to leverage your skill at more complex tasks (carriage assembly), thereby increasing your wealth, and everybody else's. Every task - EVERY task - should be done by the lowest-cost worker with sufficient skill. Anything else is wasteful. The outsourcing of low-end manufacturing from the US allowed the skilled US workers to engage in higher-profit activities, so everybody makes more money. |
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Dune
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Posted: 06 August 2008 at 12:19pm |
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Oh no. Now Rambino is going to provide a Production Possibility Frontier for us.
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JohnnyHopper
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Posted: 06 August 2008 at 12:21pm |
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In the US you're paying some jerkwad $12/hour to do a crappy job while you're actually paying out a matching $12/hour to various government charities and welfare programs, facing constant OSHA money drives/inspections, property taxes, liability insurance, health insurance, 401k matching, various ISO compliance audits and certification scams, workers comp, paying for the rain because it fell on your parking lot and runs off into a ditch and GOD help you if you have a union.
Or you take your business to China and pay some jerkwad 2 chickens to do a crappy job and kill his family if he's ever late to work. It's obvious that the only solution is more hope and government regulation.....dam CEO's and their good parking spots. Edited by JohnnyHopper - 06 August 2008 at 12:23pm |
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Pariel
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Posted: 06 August 2008 at 12:24pm |
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You do have some good points buried in there though.
Absolutely true, except that there are a large number of US workers who are not skilled enough to join in. I honestly see it as their own damn fault. Edited by Pariel - 06 August 2008 at 12:26pm |
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Rambino
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Posted: 06 August 2008 at 12:26pm |
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This is not true. Low-skill manufacturing jobs were mostly outsourced during the 70s. In the manufacturing sector today, we are actually seeing "in-sourcing," as high fuel costs and cheap dollars make it attractive to build factories near the American consumer - you will notice that many foreign car companies build cars in the US, and not just for the US market. Anybody complaining about manufacturing outsourcing is 30 years behind schedule. There is some of that going on still, but not much. During the 90s and early 00s we saw outsourcing of low-end computer jobs. Phone banks, help desks, coding, network management, etc. This continues today. Computer engineers with no special skills have a hard time finding good work in the US anymore. These days we have moved into outsourcing information professionals. This is just starting. Accountants in particular face international competition. Researchers of all kinds, radiologists and certain other physicians, lawyers to some extent - all the people whose job it is to collect and interpret information are facing competition from lower-cost providers across the globe. |
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Pariel
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Posted: 06 August 2008 at 12:28pm |
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They're facing competition in those fields, yes. But the average American industrial worker is facing no job in the next 10 years, whereas the average accountant (which the NY Times reported was one of the fastest growing outsourced jobs last year) is just facing somewhat smaller wages at this point.
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JohnnyHopper
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Posted: 06 August 2008 at 12:29pm |
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Rambino, when will we outsource lawyers :)
/flippant |
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Rambino
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Posted: 06 August 2008 at 12:32pm |
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Clearly losing your job sucks. No doubt about it. But we have been aggressively outsourcing for decades. And you know what? Except for the last 2-3 years, unemployment in the US has been at historic lows during that entire time. Even now unemployment is "low" by any objective standard. This is because the jobs that we outsource are by definition crappy. This frees up workers for better jobs. We would not have been able to lead the internet revolution if our workers had all been busy making sheet metal. Had we not outsourced the crappy work, we would not be anywhere near as wealthy as we are. And we have to continue to outsource to maintain and increase that wealth. Irrationally holding on a particular set of jobs is directly harmful to the national economy. |
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Rambino
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Posted: 06 August 2008 at 12:35pm |
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No need to be flippant - it's true. Some types of lawyers (ambulance chasers) are difficult to outsource, but corporate types such as myself face very direct outsourcing challenges. In fact, my primary competition personally comes to a large extent from outside the US. And to combat that, many US law firms have taken to outsourcing their legal research to cheaper locales. Legal outsourcing is very real and it is here now. Not yet as pervasive as accounting outsourcing, but that may yet change. |
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JohnnyHopper
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Posted: 06 August 2008 at 12:37pm |
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That reminds me. I was supposed to warn everyone that the intergalactic luddites are attacking, very slowly....on horseback. |
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Rambino
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Posted: 06 August 2008 at 12:39pm |
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See, that's the problem. Why do we have "average industrial workers" at all? Does "average industrial work" sound like a great job that we should protect at all cost, or even at any cost? It's all about retooling and reeducating. Nobody - NOBODY - should expect to do the same job for 40 years and then retire. You will, guaranteed, face several major career shifts during your life, when you will be required to learn new skills to adapt to the changing environment. If we have "average industrial workers" that can't find "average industrial work" then we need to change those workers into either not average, or not industrial. A job is not something that comes to you - you go to the job. if there are no jobs that match your skills, then you get new skills to match the jobs that are there. |
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Lightningbolt
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Posted: 06 August 2008 at 12:41pm |
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Outsourcing isn't the only factor in forclosures and the decreasing housing market but when people lose jobs they can't pay bills and property taxes and the lose their house or can't afford to build a house. Foreclosures are a nation-wide problem. My cousin, who lives in Chicago said that $1,000,000 forclosures are occuring in multitudes. Interest-only loans are at fault as well among alot of other factors. Edited by Lightningbolt - 06 August 2008 at 12:42pm |
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Rambino
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Posted: 06 August 2008 at 12:42pm |
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I lol'ed. But you raise an important point. People are all a-ga-ga over outsourcing - but outsourcing is exactly the same as technological advancement. What does it matter if you lose your job to China or a machine? You are still out of work with obsolete skills. The people protesting outsourcing are Luddites, pure and simple. You can't turn back the clock, nor should you want to. |
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